Literature DB >> 15539956

p53 prevents the accumulation of double-strand DNA breaks at stalled-replication forks induced by UV in human cells.

Shoshana Squires1, Julia A Coates, Michal Goldberg, Lorraine H Toji, Stephen P Jackson, Duncan J Clarke, Robert T Johnson.   

Abstract

To investigate the mechanism by which UV irradiation causes S-phase-dependent chromosome aberrations and thereby genomic instability, we have developed an assay to study the DNA structure of replication forks (RFs) in UV-irradiated mammalian cells, using pulse-field gel electrophoresis for the DNA analysis. We demonstrate that replication stalling at UV-induced pyrimidine dimers results in the formation of single-strand DNA (ssDNA) regions and incomplete RF structures. In normal and in nucleotide-excision-repair (NER)-defective xeroderma pimentosum (XP) cells, stalling at dimers is rapid and prolonged and recovery depends on dimer repair or bypass. By contrast, XP variant (XPV) cells, defective in replication of a UV-damaged template due to mutation of bypass-polymerase epsilon, fail to arrest at dimers, resulting in a much higher frequency of ssDNA regions in the stalled RFs. We show that the stability of UV-arrested RFs depends directly on functional p53, and indirectly on NER and pol eta. In p53-deficient cells, the stalled sites give rise to double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs), at a frequency inversely correlated with repair capacity of the cell. In normal cells only a fraction of the stalled sites give rise to DSBs, while in XPASV, XPDSV and also XPVSV, all the sites do. XPVSV cells, although repair proficient, accumulate almost double the number of DSBs, suggesting that a high frequency of ssDNA regions in UV-arrested forks cause RF instability. These replication-associated DSBs do not accumulate in p53-proficient human cells. We propose that a major mechanism by which p53 maintains genome stability is the prevention of DSB accumulation at long-lived ssDNA regions in stalled-replication forks.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15539956     DOI: 10.4161/cc.3.12.1272

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Cycle        ISSN: 1551-4005            Impact factor:   4.534


  16 in total

1.  Repair-independent chromatin assembly onto active ribosomal genes in yeast after UV irradiation.

Authors:  Antonio Conconi; Michel Paquette; Deirdre Fahy; Vyacheslav A Bespalov; Michael J Smerdon
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2005-11       Impact factor: 4.272

2.  Increased common fragile site expression, cell proliferation defects, and apoptosis following conditional inactivation of mouse Hus1 in primary cultured cells.

Authors:  Min Zhu; Robert S Weiss
Journal:  Mol Biol Cell       Date:  2007-01-10       Impact factor: 4.138

3.  Extent of constitutive histone H2AX phosphorylation on Ser-139 varies in cells with different TP53 status.

Authors:  T Tanaka; A Kurose; X Huang; F Traganos; W Dai; Z Darzynkiewicz
Journal:  Cell Prolif       Date:  2006-08       Impact factor: 6.831

4.  Transcriptome analysis reveals cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers as a major source of UV-induced DNA breaks.

Authors:  George A Garinis; James R Mitchell; Michael J Moorhouse; Katsuhiro Hanada; Harm de Waard; Dimitri Vandeputte; Judith Jans; Karl Brand; Marcel Smid; Peter J van der Spek; Jan H J Hoeijmakers; Roland Kanaar; Gijsbertus T J van der Horst
Journal:  EMBO J       Date:  2005-10-27       Impact factor: 11.598

5.  Triapine disrupts CtIP-mediated homologous recombination repair and sensitizes ovarian cancer cells to PARP and topoisomerase inhibitors.

Authors:  Z Ping Lin; Elena S Ratner; Margaret E Whicker; Yashang Lee; Alan C Sartorelli
Journal:  Mol Cancer Res       Date:  2014-01-10       Impact factor: 5.852

6.  A minority of foci or pan-nuclear apoptotic staining of gammaH2AX in the S phase after UV damage contain DNA double-strand breaks.

Authors:  Sebastien de Feraudy; Ingrid Revet; Vladimir Bezrookove; Luzviminda Feeney; James E Cleaver
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-03-29       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 7.  Cytometric assessment of DNA damage in relation to cell cycle phase and apoptosis.

Authors:  Xuan Huang; H Dorota Halicka; Frank Traganos; Toshiki Tanaka; Akira Kurose; Zbigniew Darzynkiewicz
Journal:  Cell Prolif       Date:  2005-08       Impact factor: 6.831

8.  Kinetics of the UV-induced DNA damage response in relation to cell cycle phase. Correlation with DNA replication.

Authors:  Hong Zhao; Frank Traganos; Zbigniew Darzynkiewicz
Journal:  Cytometry A       Date:  2010-03       Impact factor: 4.355

9.  p53 suppression overwhelms DNA polymerase eta deficiency in determining the cellular UV DNA damage response.

Authors:  Rebecca R Laposa; Luzviminda Feeney; Eileen Crowley; Sebastien de Feraudy; James E Cleaver
Journal:  DNA Repair (Amst)       Date:  2007-09-05

10.  Jnk2 effects on tumor development, genetic instability and replicative stress in an oncogene-driven mouse mammary tumor model.

Authors:  Peila Chen; Jamye F O'Neal; Nancy D Ebelt; Michael A Cantrell; Shreya Mitra; Azadeh Nasrazadani; Tracy L Vandenbroek; Lynn E Heasley; Carla L Van Den Berg
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-05-03       Impact factor: 3.240

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